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<p class=MsoNormal><font size=2 color=navy face=Arial><span style='font-size:
10.0pt;font-family:Arial;color:navy'>Hi,<o:p></o:p></span></font></p>
<p class=MsoNormal><font size=2 color=navy face=Arial><span style='font-size:
10.0pt;font-family:Arial;color:navy'><o:p> </o:p></span></font></p>
<p class=MsoNormal><font size=2 color=navy face=Arial><span style='font-size:
10.0pt;font-family:Arial;color:navy'>I believe the two concepts may actually
work together to cause difficulties. The case I am thinking about is where a software
product is developed, which makes an assumption that all Printer MIB
implementations will provide a particular response to a certain question given a
particular condition exists within the device, and the assumption turns out to
be false. Each time the software encounters a situation where the design assumption
turns out to be incorrect (device returns some unexpected response from the
perspective of the software), the possibility exists for significantly
increased SNMP traffic because the software needs to learn more about the
condition of the device in order to decide whether to continue the operation currently
being processed.<o:p></o:p></span></font></p>
<p class=MsoNormal><font size=2 color=navy face=Arial><span style='font-size:
10.0pt;font-family:Arial;color:navy'><o:p> </o:p></span></font></p>
<p class=MsoNormal><font size=2 color=navy face=Arial><span style='font-size:
10.0pt;font-family:Arial;color:navy'>Thus I believe we could probably link the
two concepts together in one document should the PWG consensus be that this
idea was the best option to pursue.<o:p></o:p></span></font></p>
<p class=MsoNormal><font size=2 color=navy face=Arial><span style='font-size:
10.0pt;font-family:Arial;color:navy'><o:p> </o:p></span></font></p>
<p class=MsoNormal><font size=2 color=navy face=Arial><span style='font-size:
10.0pt;font-family:Arial;color:navy'>Best Regards,<o:p></o:p></span></font></p>
<p class=MsoNormal><font size=2 color=navy face=Arial><span style='font-size:
10.0pt;font-family:Arial;color:navy'><o:p> </o:p></span></font></p>
<p class=MsoNormal><font size=2 color=navy face=Arial><span style='font-size:
10.0pt;font-family:Arial;color:navy'>/Paul<o:p></o:p></span></font></p>
<div>
<p class=MsoNormal><font size=2 color=navy face=Arial><span style='font-size:
10.0pt;font-family:Arial;color:navy'>--</span></font><font color=navy><span
style='color:navy'><o:p></o:p></span></font></p>
<p class=MsoNormal><tt><font size=2 color=navy face=Arial><span
style='font-size:10.0pt;font-family:Arial;color:navy'>Paul Tykodi</span></font></tt><font
size=2 color=navy face=Arial><span style='font-size:10.0pt;font-family:Arial;
color:navy'><br>
<tt><font face=Arial><span style='font-family:Arial'>Principal Consultant</span></font></tt><br>
<tt><font face=Arial><span style='font-family:Arial'>TCS - Tykodi Consulting
Services LLC</span></font></tt><br>
<br>
<tt><font face=Arial><span style='font-family:Arial'>Tel/Fax: 603-343-1820</span></font></tt><br>
<st1:place w:st="on"><st1:City w:st="on"><tt><font face=Arial><span
style='font-family:Arial'>Mobile</span></font></tt></st1:City></st1:place><tt><font
face=Arial><span style='font-family:Arial'>: 603-866-0712</span></font></tt><br>
<tt><font face=Arial><span style='font-family:Arial'>E-mail: <a
href="mailto:ptykodi@tykodi.com">ptykodi@tykodi.com</a></span></font></tt></span></font><font
size=2 color=navy face="Courier New"><span style='font-size:10.0pt;font-family:
"Courier New";color:navy'><br>
</span></font><tt><font size=2 color=navy face=Arial><span style='font-size:
10.0pt;font-family:Arial;color:navy'>WWW: </span></font></tt><tt><font
size=2 color=navy face="Courier New"><span style='font-size:10.0pt;color:navy'><a
href="http://www.tykodi.com/" target="_blank"><font face=Arial><span
style='font-family:Arial'>http://www.tykodi.com</span></font></a></span></font></tt><o:p></o:p></p>
</div>
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<p class=MsoNormal><b><font size=2 face=Tahoma><span style='font-size:10.0pt;
font-family:Tahoma;font-weight:bold'>From:</span></font></b><font size=2
face=Tahoma><span style='font-size:10.0pt;font-family:Tahoma'> Harry Lewis
[mailto:harryl@us.ibm.com] <br>
<b><span style='font-weight:bold'>Sent:</span></b> Thursday, February 16, 2006
2:14 AM<br>
<b><span style='font-weight:bold'>To:</span></b> McDonald, Ira<br>
<b><span style='font-weight:bold'>Cc:</span></b> pmp@pwg.org; <st1:PersonName
w:st="on">ptykodi@tykodi.com</st1:PersonName>; 'Bergman, Ron'<br>
<b><span style='font-weight:bold'>Subject:</span></b> RE: Feedback - PMP>
Minutes of the MFP Teleconference 20060214</span></font><o:p></o:p></p>
</div>
<p class=MsoNormal><font size=3 face="Times New Roman"><span style='font-size:
12.0pt'><o:p> </o:p></span></font></p>
<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:12.0pt'><font size=3
face="Times New Roman"><span style='font-size:12.0pt'><br>
</span></font><font size=2 face=sans-serif><span style='font-size:10.0pt;
font-family:sans-serif'>Inconsistency is a more serious problem (in my
experience) than efficiency (which I THINK is Paul's hot button). I think it
would be great if we addressed both, but these may require separate efforts. </span></font><br>
<font size=2 face=sans-serif><span style='font-size:10.0pt;font-family:sans-serif'>----------------------------------------------
<br>
Harry Lewis <br>
IBM STSM<br>
Chairman - IEEE-ISTO Printer Working Group<br>
http://www.pwg.org<br>
IBM Printing Systems <br>
http://www.ibm.com/printers<br>
303-924-5337<br>
---------------------------------------------- </span></font><br>
<br>
<o:p></o:p></p>
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<p class=MsoNormal><b><font size=1 face=sans-serif><span style='font-size:
7.5pt;font-family:sans-serif;font-weight:bold'>"McDonald, Ira"
<imcdonald@sharplabs.com></span></font></b><font size=1
face=sans-serif><span style='font-size:7.5pt;font-family:sans-serif'> </span></font><br>
<font size=1 face=sans-serif><span style='font-size:7.5pt;font-family:sans-serif'>Sent
by: pmp-owner@pwg.org</span></font> <o:p></o:p></p>
<p><font size=1 face=sans-serif><span style='font-size:7.5pt;font-family:
sans-serif'>02/15/2006 08:04 PM</span></font> <o:p></o:p></p>
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<p class=MsoNormal align=right style='text-align:right'><font size=1
face=sans-serif><span style='font-size:7.5pt;font-family:sans-serif'>To</span></font><o:p></o:p></p>
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<td valign=top style='padding:.75pt .75pt .75pt .75pt'>
<p class=MsoNormal><font size=1 face=sans-serif><span style='font-size:
7.5pt;font-family:sans-serif'>"'Bergman, Ron'"
<Ron.Bergman@rpsa.ricoh.com>, <st1:PersonName w:st="on">ptykodi@tykodi.com</st1:PersonName>,
pmp@pwg.org</span></font> <o:p></o:p></p>
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<p class=MsoNormal align=right style='text-align:right'><font size=1
face=sans-serif><span style='font-size:7.5pt;font-family:sans-serif'>cc</span></font><o:p></o:p></p>
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<p class=MsoNormal><font size=3 face="Times New Roman"><span
style='font-size:12.0pt'><o:p> </o:p></span></font></p>
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<p class=MsoNormal align=right style='text-align:right'><font size=1
face=sans-serif><span style='font-size:7.5pt;font-family:sans-serif'>Subject</span></font><o:p></o:p></p>
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<p class=MsoNormal><font size=1 face=sans-serif><span style='font-size:
7.5pt;font-family:sans-serif'>RE: Feedback - PMP> Minutes of the MFP
Teleconference 20060214</span></font><o:p></o:p></p>
</td>
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<p class=MsoNormal><font size=3 face="Times New Roman"><span
style='font-size:12.0pt'><o:p> </o:p></span></font></p>
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<td valign=top style='padding:.75pt .75pt .75pt .75pt'>
<p class=MsoNormal><font size=3 face="Times New Roman"><span
style='font-size:12.0pt'><o:p> </o:p></span></font></p>
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<p class=MsoNormal><font size=3 face="Times New Roman"><span
style='font-size:12.0pt'><o:p> </o:p></span></font></p>
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<br>
<br>
</span></font><tt><font size=2 face="Courier New"><span style='font-size:10.0pt'>Hi,</span></font></tt><font
size=2 face="Courier New"><span style='font-size:10.0pt;font-family:"Courier New"'><br>
<br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">I spoke with Rick Landau (Dell) this afternoon and
he's getting</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">some input from Dell management software
implementors who have</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">observed implementation inconsistencies in Printer
MIB - he said</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">he'll pass these along pretty soon - I think that
cross-vendor</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">management software implementors are some of the
best allies for</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">a PWG Best Practices document on the Printer MIB.</font></tt><br>
<br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">Note that the PWG Process/2.0 requires that
Implementors Guides</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">be subject to the full process and Formal Approval
and final</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">publication as Best Practices in
'/pub/pwg/informational'</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">(i.e., unlike IETF Implementors Guides they are
NORMATIVE).</font></tt><br>
<br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">Cheers,</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">- Ira</font></tt><br>
<br>
<br>
<br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">Ira McDonald (Musician / Software Architect)</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">Blue Roof Music / High North Inc</font></tt><br>
<st1:address w:st="on"><st1:Street w:st="on"><tt><font face="Courier New">PO
Box</font></tt></st1:Street><tt><font face="Courier New"> 221</font></tt></st1:address><tt><font
face="Courier New"> Grand <st1:place w:st="on"><st1:City w:st="on">Marais</st1:City>,
<st1:State w:st="on">MI</st1:State> <st1:PostalCode w:st="on">49839</st1:PostalCode></st1:place></font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">phone: +1-906-494-2434</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">email: imcdonald@sharplabs.com</font></tt><br>
<br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> -----Original Message-----</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> From: pmp-owner@pwg.org
[mailto:pmp-owner@pwg.org]On Behalf </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Of Bergman,</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Ron</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Sent: Wednesday, February 15, 2006 12:37 PM</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> To: <st1:PersonName w:st="on">ptykodi@tykodi.com</st1:PersonName>;
pmp@pwg.org</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Subject: RE: Feedback - PMP> Minutes of
the MFP </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Teleconference 20060214</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Hi Paul,</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> I have also observed poorly designed SNMP
based applications </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> that consume</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> enormous amounts of network bandwith.
For example, reading </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> large portions</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> of the input and output tables at a fairly
high frequency to </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> determine the</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> available paper sources and destinations.
In many cases I </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> believe this is</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> the result of a desire to simplify the
application, through </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> the use of a</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> single query loop, by developers that are not
experienced in </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> real-time code</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> practices.</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> As chairman of the PWG MIBs Working Group I
would be glad to </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> work with you</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> to define and present this as a project
proposal to the PWG.</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">>
Regards,</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">>
Ron Bergman</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> -----Original Message-----</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> From: pmp-owner@pwg.org
[mailto:pmp-owner@pwg.org]On Behalf Of Paul</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Tykodi</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Sent: Wednesday, February 15, 2006 6:13 AM</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> To: pmp@pwg.org</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Subject: RE: Feedback - PMP> Minutes of
the MFP </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Teleconference 20060214</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Hi Ira,</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> I am willing to be a co-editor for such a
project. Is this </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> something the PWG</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> would likely want to pursue in the near term
future?</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Thanks.</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Best Regards,</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> /Paul</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> --</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Paul Tykodi</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Principal Consultant</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> TCS - Tykodi Consulting Services LLC</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Tel/Fax: 603-343-1820</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> <st1:City w:st="on"><st1:place w:st="on">Mobile</st1:place></st1:City>:
603-866-0712</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> E-mail: <st1:PersonName w:st="on">ptykodi@tykodi.com</st1:PersonName></font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> WWW: http://www.tykodi.com</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> -----Original Message-----</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> From: pmp-owner@pwg.org
[mailto:pmp-owner@pwg.org] On Behalf </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Of McDonald,</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Ira</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Sent: Wednesday, February 15, 2006 1:06 AM</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> To: '<st1:PersonName w:st="on">ptykodi@tykodi.com</st1:PersonName>';
pmp@pwg.org</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Subject: RE: Feedback - PMP> Minutes of
the MFP </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Teleconference 20060214</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Hi Paul,</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Harry Lewis (IBM, chair of PWG) has
repeatedly suggested that a</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> good project would be a PWG standard
"Printer MIB Implementor's</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Guide" - similar in purpose and scope to
the IETF Proposed Std</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> "IPP/1.1 Implementor's Guide" (RFC
3196, November 2001).</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Volunteer PWG editor bandwidth is the problem
- that and the very</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> complicated problem space of SNMP
optimization biased by MIB</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> optimization biased by the fact that printers
(and spoolers) are</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> supposed to "print first and bother me
later".</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> A first step was that Printer MIB v2 (RFC
3805) contained a great</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> many improved DESCRIPTION clauses that
clarified and recommended</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> implementation choices for many of the
columnar objects.</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> But the problem you've identified is a whole
system problem, not</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> just a Printer MIB implementation problem.</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Cheers,</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> - Ira (co-editor of Printer MIB v2)</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Ira McDonald (Musician / Software Architect)</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Blue Roof Music / High North Inc</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> PO Box 221 Grand <st1:place w:st="on"><st1:City
w:st="on">Marais</st1:City>, <st1:State w:st="on">MI</st1:State> <st1:PostalCode
w:st="on">49839</st1:PostalCode></st1:place></font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> phone: +1-906-494-2434</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> email: imcdonald@sharplabs.com</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> -----Original Message-----</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> From: pmp-owner@pwg.org
[mailto:pmp-owner@pwg.org]On Behalf </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Of Paul Tykodi</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Sent: Tuesday, February 14, 2006 10:50 PM</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> To: pmp@pwg.org</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Subject: RE: Feedback - PMP> Minutes of
the MFP </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Teleconference 20060214</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Dear Bill,</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> The host I was most recently analyzing was an
IBM iSeries - </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> AS/400 host. The</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> MIB itself worked flawlessly. I am not
suggesting that it was </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> somehow the</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> culprit for the slow printing or that it did
not work correctly. The</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> communication started OK and then the host was
concerned that </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> a response</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> packet was not received in a timely fashion.
It began a </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> significant SNMP</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> based questioning process to determine the
current hardware </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> status of the</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> device and interspersed with the SNMP
questions about whether </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> the device was</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> in error or not came a re-transmission of a
potentially lost </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> packet just to</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> be safe.</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Pretty soon the majority of the communication
on the wire </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> revolved around</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> SNMP discussions as to the device's status
and data packet </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> re-transmissions</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> and confirmations from the printing device
that it had indeed </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> received the</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> packet re-transmissions. As you mention, the
whole idea of printing</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> information had become unfortunately a
secondary concern.</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> In the end, all of the data was printed and
no errors were </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> reported by the</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> host. Unfortunately the method utilized to
determine that </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> everything was</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> actually fine was so intrusive on the
printing process that I feel</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> comfortable saying I believe that a typical
customer (having </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> paid a fee for</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> their printing device related to its rated
engine performance) would</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> probably not have accepted the result as
commercially viable.</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> So my previous comment is directed more
towards device </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> managing software</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> product's use of MIB capabilities (especially
if more </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> interesting things to</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> check are added into future MIB's) and the
impact that </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> significant device</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> status verifications can have on the actual
process (in this </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> case printing),</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> which is being monitored.</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Thus in the future if some type of RFC or
other standards </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> document were to</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> be produced, my suggestion would be to
include some examples </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> that tried to</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> help steer software developers implementing
use of MIB data away from</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> creating the issue you outline in point b.
below.</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Thanks.</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Best Regards,</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> /Paul</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> --</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Paul Tykodi</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Principal Consultant</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> TCS - Tykodi Consulting Services LLC</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Tel/Fax: 603-343-1820</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> <st1:City w:st="on"><st1:place w:st="on">Mobile</st1:place></st1:City>:
603-866-0712</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> E-mail: <st1:PersonName w:st="on">ptykodi@tykodi.com</st1:PersonName></font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> WWW: http://www.tykodi.com</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> From: pmp-owner@pwg.org
[mailto:pmp-owner@pwg.org] On Behalf Of</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> wamwagner@comcast.net</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Sent: Tuesday, February 14, 2006 10:33 PM</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> To: <st1:PersonName w:st="on">ptykodi@tykodi.com</st1:PersonName>;
pmp@pwg.org</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Cc: Paul Tykodi</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Subject: RE: Feedback - PMP> Minutes of
the MFP </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Teleconference 20060214</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Paul,</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Thanks for sending in your observation. I
have worked with </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> printers and SNMP</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> management for many years and have not seen
anything like the sort of</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> slowdown that you cite. Perhaps this is because
I have worked </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> with slower</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> machines and printers/MFPs with separate
NICs. At any rate, a </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> basic SNMP</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> tenet is that servicing of SNMP is secondary
to the main </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> purpose of the</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> device. Indeed, reflecting this, I have seen
missed or late </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> SNMP responses</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> during periods of high print activity.</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Of course, it is desirable to have efficient
MIBs, something </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> that sometimes</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> gets lost in this era of "human
readability". Although you may have</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> contradicting data, I would suggest that the
current public </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> MIBs are not in</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> themselves inefficient and that the problem
you observed may </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> be due to other</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> factors such as:</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> a. certain private MIBS
use an indirect addressing approach,</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> particularly for writes, which may make for
some elegance but does</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> complicate interaction</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> b. many management
applications are terribly </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> inefficient, repeatedly</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> querying the same (sometimes status)
variable, and often unnecessarily</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> dumping blocks of data.</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> c. Drastically
underpowered controllers and/or poor handling of</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> priorities</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Although I understand that it may be
difficult to release </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> such information,</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> it would be useful to have some information
on the specifics of the</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> slow-down... the condition the management
station was </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> querying, the objects</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> being queried, etc.</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Bill Wagner, TIC</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> -------------- Original message
-------------- </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> From: "Paul Tykodi" <<st1:PersonName
w:st="on">ptykodi@tykodi.com</st1:PersonName>> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Dear List,</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> During the last year, I have been involved in
some network </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> analysis looking</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> at how certain hosts use the current printer
MIB to determine </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> device status</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> (including that of MFP's) and what effect a
significant number of SNMP</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> queries and responses can have on effective
printing </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> throughput (at times</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> rather dramatic reduction in achievable
throughput).</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> In looking at the minutes from today's
meeting, I would </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> suggest that it</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> might be a good idea to consider whether MIB
optimization should be a</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> category for an MFP alerts project. The idea
would be to at </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> least minimally</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> describe some best practices for MIB usage,
which would </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> result in the host</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> obtaining the required information using the
smallest SNMP query and</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> response packet transmission overhead
possible.</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> In case people are wondering how dramatic a
reduction in PPM </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> I have observed</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> when SNMP traffic is significant (host trying
to determine </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> whether device is</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> in error or not - multiple queries are sent
asking more and </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> more specific</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> questions of the printer MIB), I have seen
printers and MFP's </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> with rated</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> speeds in the 75 - 125 PPM range reduced to
achieving actual </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> throughput in</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> the 10 to 20 PPM range.</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> HTH</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Best Regards,</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> /Paul</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> --</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Paul Tykodi</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Principal Consultant</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> TCS - Tykodi Consulting Services LLC</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Tel/Fax: 603-343-1820</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> <st1:City w:st="on"><st1:place w:st="on">Mobile</st1:place></st1:City>:
603-866-0712</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> E-mail: <st1:PersonName w:st="on">ptykodi@tykodi.com</st1:PersonName></font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> WWW: http://www.tykodi.com</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> From: pmp-owner@pwg.org
[mailto:pmp-owner@pwg.org] On Behalf </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Of Bergman, Ron</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Sent: Tuesday, February 14, 2006 7:02 PM</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> To: pmp@pwg.org</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Subject: PMP> Minutes of the MFP
Teleconference 20060214</font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> The minutes can be found at: </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">>
ftp://ftp.pwg.org/pub/pwg/pmp/minutes/mfp/MFP_Minutes_20060214.pdf </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Ron Bergman </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> Chairman, Printer MIBs Working Group </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt><br>
<tt><font face="Courier New">> </font></tt></span></font><o:p></o:p></p>
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